Transparent conductive polyester film and use of same

ABSTRACT

Provided is a transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display which is free of occurrence of a fold mark or a tear at a folding portion thereof to be used in a foldable display excellent in mass productivity, and free of a risk of causing distortion in an image displayed at a folding portion thereof, and a mobile device. The transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display includes: a polyester film; and a transparent conductive layer laminated on at least one surface of the polyester film, wherein the polyester film satisfies the following conditions: (1) a refractive index in a bending direction is from 1.590 to 1.620; (2) a refractive index in a folding portion direction is from 1.670 to 1.700; (3) a refractive index in a thickness direction is 1.520 or less; and (4) a density is 1.380 g/cm 3  or more, wherein the bending direction refers to a direction orthogonal to a folding portion of the polyester film at a time when the polyester film is folded.

TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention relates to a transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display, a foldable display, and a mobile device, and more specifically, to a foldable display and a mobile device each of which hardly causes image distortion due to deformation or a tear of a film even when repeatedly folded, and a transparent conductive polyester film and a touchscreen for the foldable display.

BACKGROUND ART

Becoming thinner and lighter, a mobile device, such as a smartphone, has become widely prevalent. While being required to have a variety of functions, the mobile device is also required to be convenient in use. It is taken for granted that a prevailing mobile device can be operated with one hand for simple tasks, and can be put into a clothes pocket. Thus, such mobile device needs to have a small screen size, such as about 6 inches.

Meanwhile, a tablet device having a screen size of from 7 inches to 10 inches is intended for use not only for video content and music, but also for business and drawing purposes, reading, and the like, and thus has a high level of functionality. However, the tablet device cannot be operated with one hand and is not particularly portable, leaving some issues in regard to convenience.

In order to meet the requirements described above, there is a proposal of a technique involving making a compact device by connecting a plurality of displays. However, due to the remaining bezel portion, the image is cut up, and the visibility becomes low. Thus, this technique is not commonly used.

In recent years, a mobile device including a flexible display or a foldable display has been proposed. This technique enables one to conveniently carry a mobile device including a large-screen display without image-cutting problems.

An image display surface of an image display apparatus, in particular, an image display apparatus including a touchscreen, which has been rapidly gaining widespread use in recent years, is required to have such excellent durable folding performance that its optical film is free of occurrence of a tear or a crack even when repeatedly folded.

In addition, glass is often used in a display screen of the touchscreen. However, the glass, though having a high hardness, is broken when folded, and cannot impart folding performance. In addition, the glass is a material having a large specific gravity, and hence needs to be thinned in order to achieve lightweighting. However, there is a problem in that, when thinned, the glass is reduced in strength, and hence is liable to be broken. Films are used in various portions of the foldable display, such as a polarizing plate, a retardation plate, a touchscreen substrate, a substrate of a display cell of organic EL or the like, and a back-surface protective member, and these films have also been required to have durability against repeated folding.

In addition, for example, in PTL 1, as an optical film having bendability, there is a disclosure of an optical film including two hard coating layers having different Vickers hardnesses arranged on one surface of a substrate film.

However, such optical film may undergo a tear in the substrate film or be left with a fold mark when repeatedly folded, and hence does not satisfy bending resistance performance required in recent years.

In addition, in PTL 2, there is a proposal of use of a polyimide film or an aramid film as a resin substrate having bending resistance. The polyimide film or the aramid film is extremely expensive, leading to an increase in price of a flexible terminal itself, and hence is not preferred.

In PTL 3, there is a proposal that two substrate units each including a substrate film layer, a hard coating layer, and a conductive layer in the stated order be laminated so that the respective substrate film layers may be directly opposed to each other, and a cycloolefin resin be used as the substrate film layer. However, this is not applicable to a foldable display because of an increase in total thickness, which hinders lightweighting, and insufficient bending resistance performance of the cycloolefin resin substrate itself.

CITATION LIST Patent Literature PTL 1: JP 2014-186210 A PTL 2: JP 2017-33034 A PTL 3: JP 2016-90925 A SUMMARY OF INVENTION Technical Problem

The present invention has been made in view of the above-mentioned problem, and is intended to provide a transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display which is free of occurrence of a fold mark or a tear at a folding portion thereof, in order to provide a foldable display excellent in mass productivity, and free of a risk of causing distortion in an image displayed at a folding portion thereof after being repeatedly folded, and a mobile device including such foldable display.

Solution to Problem

Specifically, the present invention includes the following configurations.

Item 1.

A transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display, including:

a polyester film; and

a transparent conductive layer laminated on at least one surface of the polyester film,

wherein the polyester film satisfies the following conditions:

-   -   (1) a refractive index in a bending direction is from 1.590 to         1.620;     -   (2) a refractive index in a folding portion direction is from         1.670 to 1.700;     -   (3) a refractive index in a thickness direction is 1.520 or         less; and     -   (4) a density is 1.380 g/cm³ or more,     -   wherein the bending direction refers to a direction orthogonal         to a folding portion of the polyester film at a time when the         polyester film is folded.

Item 2.

The transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display according to Item 1, wherein the transparent conductive layer contains at least one kind selected from: a conductive fibrous filler; a metal oxide; and a conductive polymer.

Item 3.

The transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display according to Item 1 or 2, wherein the polyester film has a total light transmittance of 85% or more, a haze of 3% or less, and a maximum heat shrinkage ratio of 6% or less.

Item 4.

The transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display according to any one of Items 1 to 3, further including an easy-to-adhere layer on at least one surface of the polyester film.

Item 5.

The transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display according to any one of Items 1 to 4, wherein the polyester film includes a hard coating layer having a thickness of from 1 to 50 μm on at least one surface thereof.

Item 6.

A touchscreen for a foldable display, including the transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display of any one of Items 1 to 5.

Item 7.

A foldable display including the touchscreen for a foldable display of Item 6.

Item 8.

A mobile device including the foldable display of Item 7.

Advantageous Effects of Invention

While the foldable display using the transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display of the present invention maintains mass productivity, the polyester film is free of occurrence of a crack or a tear at the folding portion thereof, does not cause deformation after being repeatedly folded, and does not cause image distortion at the folding portion of the display. The mobile device including the foldable display using the polyester film as described above provides a beautiful image, is rich in functionality, and is excellent in convenience, such as portability.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a schematic view for illustrating a bend radius at a time when a foldable display in the present invention is folded.

FIG. 2 is a schematic view for illustrating the bending direction of a polyester film for a transparent conductive polyester film of a foldable display in the present invention.

DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS Display

The term “display” as used in the present invention refers to display devices in general. There are several kinds of displays such as an LCD, an organic EL display, an inorganic EL display, an LED, and an FED. Of those, an LCD, an organic EL display, and an inorganic EL display, each of which has a foldable structure, are preferred. In particular, an organic EL display and an inorganic EL display, each of which can reduce a layer structure, are more preferred, and an organic EL display, which has a wide color gamut, is even more preferred.

Foldable Display

A foldable display is one continuous display that can be folded, for example, in half when carried. The foldable display can be reduced in size by half by being folded, to thereby improve portability. The bend radius of the foldable display is preferably 5 mm or less, more preferably 3 mm or less. When the bend radius is 5 mm or less, thinning in a folded state can be achieved. The bend radius may be said to be desirably as small as possible. However, as the bend radius becomes smaller, a fold mark becomes more liable to be formed. The bend radius is preferably 0.1 mm or more, but may be 0.5 mm or more, or may be 1 mm or more. Even when the bend radius is 1 mm, practically sufficient thinning can be achieved at the time of carrying. The bend radius of a device when folded is measured at a point marked with reference numeral 11 in the schematic view of FIG. 1, and means the inner radius of the folding portion of the device when folded. A surface protective film to be described later may be located on the outer side or the inner side of the folded foldable display.

In addition, the foldable display may be folded in thirds or fourths, or may be of a rolling type called rollable, and all of these fall within the range of the term “foldable display” as used in the present invention.

A transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display of the present invention may be used in any portion of the touchscreen module of a foldable display. A typical configuration of the foldable display and the touchscreen module in which the transparent conductive polyester film of the present invention may be used are described below by taking an organic EL display as an example.

A polyester film including a transparent conductive layer is referred to as “transparent conductive polyester film”, and a product including the transparent conductive polyester film as a constituent member and having wiring and the like incorporated therein to serve as a sensor for detecting the touch (proximity) of a finger or the like is referred to as “touchscreen module”.

In addition, the transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display of the present invention is hereinafter sometimes referred to simply as “transparent conductive polyester film of the present invention”, “conductive film of the present invention”, or “conductive polyester film of the present invention”.

Foldable Organic EL Display

A foldable organic EL display essentially includes an organic EL module, and further includes, as required, a circularly polarizing plate, a touchscreen module, a surface protective film, a back-surface protective film, and the like.

Touchscreen Module

A mobile device preferably includes a touchscreen. When the organic EL display is used, the touchscreen module is arranged preferably on the viewing side of the organic EL module, more preferably between the organic EL module and the circularly polarizing plate. The touchscreen module includes a transparent conductive polyester film including a transparent substrate, such as a film, and a transparent conductive layer arranged thereon. In the present invention, a specific polyester film may be used as the transparent substrate of the transparent conductive polyester film. When used as the transparent substrate of the transparent conductive polyester film, the polyester film is preferably provided with a refractive index adjusting layer and a hard coating layer.

Transparent Conductive Layer

The transparent conductive layer in the present invention only needs to be a layer that is transparent and has conductivity, and is not particularly limited, but examples thereof include a conductive filler-containing layer, a metal oxide layer, and a conductive polymer-containing layer.

A film formation method for the transparent conductive layer is not particularly limited, but examples thereof include: dry film formation methods, such as a sputtering method, a vacuum deposition method, a CVD method, and an ion plating method; and wet film formation methods, such as a sol-gel method and a coating method. The film formation method may be appropriately selected depending on the kind of the transparent conductive layer.

The conductive layer is often patterned when used in a capacitive touchscreen. Examples of the pattern include: a mesh-like straight-line lattice pattern of straight lines approximately orthogonal to each other; a wavy-line lattice pattern in which a conductive portion between intersections has at least one curved portion; and a diamond-shaped pattern.

As a method for the patterning, there are given a method involving performing patterning after film formation, such as chemical etching or laser etching, and a method involving performing application (printing) in a pattern at the time of coating. Examples of the method involving performing printing in a pattern include a gravure printing method, a relief printing method, an offset printing method, a screen printing method, and an inkjet printing method. The method may be selected in accordance with, for example, the characteristics of a coating material and the fineness of the pattern.

In addition, the surface resistivity of the conductive layer is not particularly limited, but is preferably 0.1/or more and 200/or less.

The term “transparent” as used in the present invention only means being transparent to the naked eye in a state of having been processed so as to function as a touchscreen, and a portion having conductivity does not necessarily need to be transparent in itself. For example, even when the conductive layer is provided with an electrode pattern so as to function as a touchscreen, and wiring itself is made of a metal, such as gold, thereby being non-transparent, the conductive layer may be regarded as transparent if, when the touchscreen is viewed with the naked eye, the electrode pattern is invisible so as to allow an image to be observed.

Preferred examples of the conductive filler of the conductive filler-containing layer include: fillers or fibers of metals, such as gold, silver, copper, aluminum, nickel, titanium, iron, zinc, and tin, and alloys thereof; fillers of metal oxides; metal-coated synthetic fibers; and conductive carbon fibers, such as a carbon nanotube. As the fillers of metals, alloys, and metal oxides, there may be used fillers having various shapes, such as spherical particles, flat particles, flaky particles, needle-shaped particles, and fibrous particles. Of those, flaky particles, needle-shaped particles, and fibrous fillers (fibers of metals and alloys thereof, fibers of metal oxides, metal-coated synthetic fibers, and conductive carbon fibers) are preferred from the viewpoint of bending resistance, and fibrous fillers are more preferred.

A binder resin is preferably used in the conductive filler-containing layer. Examples of the binder resin include a polyester resin, a polyurethane resin, a polyamide resin, and an acrylic resin. Further, any such resin is preferably crosslinked. It is appropriate to use a crosslinking agent in accordance with each resin, and examples thereof include an isocyanate compound, an epoxy resin, a melamine compound, oxazoline, a carbodiimide, and a compound having two or more double bonds. The content of the conductive filler is preferably from 10 parts by mass to 400 parts by mass with respect to 100 parts by mass of a resin component forming the conductive layer.

The conductive filler-containing layer may be formed by an application method. The electrode pattern may be formed by a method involving processing by chemical etching or laser etching after application, or a method involving formation by printing. Examples thereof include a gravure printing method, a relief printing method, an offset printing method, a screen printing method, and an inkjet printing method, and a method may be selected in accordance with, for example, the characteristics of a coating material and the fineness of the pattern.

Examples of the metal of the metal layer include metals, such as gold, silver, copper, aluminum, nickel, titanium, iron, zinc, and tin. The metal layer may be formed by a vapor deposition method, a sputtering method, or the like, and the electrode pattern is preferably formed through processing by chemical etching or laser etching after the formation of the metal layer.

Examples of the metal oxide layer may include ZnO, CeO₂, Sb₂O₃, SnO₂, indium tin oxide (abbreviation; ITO), In₂O₃, antimony-doped tin oxide (abbreviation; ATO), and aluminum-doped zinc oxide (abbreviation; AZO). The metal oxide layer may be formed by a sputtering method or the like, and the electrode pattern is preferably formed through processing by chemical etching or laser etching after the formation of the metal oxide layer.

As the conductive polymer of the conductive polymer-containing layer, there may be used, for example, aromatic conjugated poly(p-phenylene), heterocyclic conjugated polypyrrole, polythiophene, aliphatic conjugated polyacetylene, heteroatom-containing conjugated polyaniline, mixed-type conjugated poly(phenylene vinylene), a multichain-type conjugated system which is a conjugated system having a plurality of conjugated chains in a molecule, or a conducting agent obtained by increasing a molecular weight, such as a conductive complex which is a polymer obtained by graft- or block-copolymerizing any of the above-mentioned conjugated polymer chains to a saturated polymer.

The conductive layer containing the conductive polymer may contain any of the resin components mentioned for the conductive filler-containing layer. The amount described for the conductive filler-containing layer is directly applicable to the content of the conductive polymer in the conductive layer containing the conductive polymer.

The conductive polymer-containing layer may be formed by an application method, and the electrode pattern may be formed by the same method as in the description of the conductive filler-containing layer.

The transparent conductive layer is more preferably the conductive filler-containing layer among the above-mentioned layers from the viewpoints of, for example, a transmission property in a visible light region and bending resistance.

Preferred examples of the conductive filler include: fillers or fibers of metals, such as gold, silver, aluminum, nickel, titanium, iron, zinc, and tin, and alloys thereof; fillers of metal oxides; metal-coated synthetic fibers; and conductive carbon fibers. As the fillers of metals, alloys, and metal oxides, there may be used fillers having various shapes, such as spherical particles, flat particles, flaky particles, and fibrous particles. Of those, flaky particles and fibrous fillers (fibers of metals and alloys thereof, fibers of metal oxides, metal-coated synthetic fibers, and conductive carbon fibers) are preferred from the viewpoint of bending resistance, and fibrous fillers are more preferred.

The fiber diameter of the fibrous filler is preferably 200 nm or less, and the fiber length thereof is preferably 1 μm or more. A case in which the fiber diameter is 200 nm or less is preferred because the transparent conductive layer to be produced does not have a high haze value, and hence provides sufficient light transmission performance. A preferred lower limit of the fiber diameter of the conductive fibrous filler is 10 nm from the viewpoint of the conductivity of the transparent conductive layer, and a more preferred range of the fiber diameter is from 15 nm to 180 nm. In addition, a case in which the fiber length of the conductive fibrous filler is 1 μm or more is preferred because a transparent conductive layer having sufficient conductive performance can be formed and aggregation can be suppressed to prevent an increase in haze value and a reduction in light transmission performance. A preferred upper limit of the fiber length is 500 μm, a more preferred range of the fiber length is from 3 μm to 300 μm, and a still more preferred range thereof is from 10 μm to 30 μm. The fiber diameter and fiber length of the conductive fibrous filler may be determined using, for example, an electron microscope, such as a SEM or a TEM.

Examples of the conductive carbon fiber include a vapor-grown carbon fiber (VGCF), a carbon nanotube (CNT), a wire cup, and a wire wall. Those conductive carbon fibers may be used alone or in combination thereof.

The CNT may be any of a single-walled CNT, a double-walled CNT, and a multi-walled CNT having three or more walls, but a CNT having a diameter within the range of from 0.3 nm to 100 nm and a length of from about 0.1 μm to about 20 μm is preferably used. In order to increase the transparency of the conductive layer and reduce the surface resistance value thereof, a single-walled CNT or a double-walled CNT having a diameter of 10 nm or less and a length within the range of from 1 μm to 10 μm is more preferred. In addition, it is preferred that an assembly of CNTs be free of impurities, such as amorphous carbon and a catalyst metal, to the extent possible.

As a metal fiber, there may be used, for example, a fiber produced by a wire drawing method, which involves stretching a metal into a thin and long shape, or a cutting method. Such metal fibers may be used alone or in combination thereof. Of those metal fibers, a metal fiber using silver is preferred because of being excellent in conductivity.

An example of the metal-coated synthetic fiber is a fiber obtained by coating an acrylic fiber with a metal. Such metal-coated synthetic fibers may be used alone or in combination thereof. Of those metal-coated synthetic fibers, a metal-coated synthetic fiber using silver is preferred because of being excellent in conductivity.

The content of the conductive filler in the transparent conductive layer is preferably, for example, from 20 parts by mass to 3,000 parts by mass with respect to 100 parts by mass of the resin component forming the transparent conductive layer. A case in which the content is 3,000 parts by mass or less is preferred because the transparent conductive polyester film of the present invention achieves sufficient light transmission performance without being increased in haze. In addition, a case in which the content is 20 parts by mass or more is preferred because conduction in the transparent conductive layer is maintained without an excessive increase in amount of the binder resin entering a point of contact between the conductive fillers, and hence the resistance value of the transparent conductive polyester film of the present invention is reduced. A more preferred lower limit of the content of the conductive filler is 50 parts by mass, and a more preferred upper limit thereof is 1,000 parts by mass.

Examples of the metal oxide filler may include ZnO, CeO₂, Sb₂O₃, SnO₂, indium tin oxide that is often abbreviated as ITO, In₂O₃, Al₂O₃, antimony-doped tin oxide (abbreviation; ATO), and aluminum-doped zinc oxide (abbreviation; AZO). The average particle diameter of the metal oxide filler is preferably from 0.1 nm to 0.1 μm. When the average particle diameter falls within such range, there is obtained a transparent conductive layer having high transparency by virtue of having hardly any haze and a satisfactory total light transmittance.

The content of the metal oxide filler is preferably from 10 parts by mass to 400 parts by mass with respect to 100 parts by mass of the resin component forming the transparent conductive layer. When the content is less than 10 parts by mass, a transparent conductive layer having sufficient conductive performance cannot be formed in some cases, and when the content is more than 400 parts by mass, the transparent conductive polyester film of the present invention has a high haze or insufficient light transmission performance in some cases.

The resin component of the transparent conductive layer is not particularly limited, and examples thereof include hitherto known materials.

Examples thereof include a polyester resin, a polyurethane resin, a polyamide resin, and an acrylic resin. Further, any such resin is preferably crosslinked. It is appropriate to use a crosslinking agent in accordance with each resin, and examples thereof include an isocyanate compound, an epoxy resin, a melamine compound, oxazoline, a carbodiimide, and a compound having two or more double bonds.

The conductive layer containing the conductive filler may be formed by applying (printing) a conductive coating material containing the conductive filler and the resin component onto the polyester film serving as the transparent substrate, followed by drying.

When the transparent conductive layer is the conductive polymer-containing layer, as the conductive polymer, there may be used, for example, aromatic conjugated poly(p-phenylene), heterocyclic conjugated polypyrrole, polythiophene, aliphatic conjugated polyacetylene, heteroatom-containing conjugated polyaniline, mixed-type conjugated poly(phenylene vinylene), a multichain-type conjugated system which is a conjugated system having a plurality of conjugated chains in a molecule, or a conducting agent obtained by increasing a molecular weight, such as a conductive complex which is a polymer obtained by graft- or block-copolymerizing any of the above-mentioned conjugated polymer chains to a saturated polymer.

The transparent conductive layer containing the conductive polymer may contain any of the above-mentioned resin components.

The transparent conductive layer containing the conductive polymer may be formed by applying (printing) a conductive coating material containing the conductive polymer and the resin component as required onto the polyester film serving as the transparent substrate, followed by drying.

The above-mentioned conductive coating material may contain an additive to be generally used for a coating material, such as a crosslinking catalyst, a dispersant, a dispersion stabilizer, a thickener, or a leveling agent, and a solvent in addition to the conductive filler or the conductive polymer, and the resin component. In addition, when the coating material is radiation-curable, the coating material may further contain a polymerization initiator, a polymerization inhibitor, or the like.

Further, a plurality of kinds of the conductive fillers may be used as a mixture, and moreover, both of the conductive polymer and the conductive filler may be used.

The transparent conductive layer may contain refractive index adjusting particles.

Examples of the refractive index adjusting particles include high-refractive index fine particles and low-refractive index fine particles. The high-refractive index fine particles are not particularly limited, and examples thereof include: fine particles formed of materials each having a high refractive index, such as resins each having a high refractive index obtained by incorporating an aromatic ring, a sulfur atom, or a bromine atom into resin materials, such as an aromatic polyimide resin, an epoxy resin, a (meth)acrylic resin (acrylate or methacrylate compound), a polyester resin, and a urethane resin, and precursors thereof; fine particles of the above-mentioned metal oxide filler; and metal alkoxide fine particles. The low-refractive index fine particles are not particularly limited, and examples thereof include: fine particles formed of materials each having a low refractive index, such as resins each having a low refractive index obtained by incorporating a fluorine atom into resin materials, such as an epoxy resin, a (meth)acrylic resin, a polyester resin, and a urethane resin, and precursors thereof; magnesium fluoride fine particles; and hollow or porous fine particles (organic or inorganic).

When the transparent conductive layer is the metal oxide layer, it is preferred to use, as its metal oxide, any of the metal oxides given as the metal oxide filler described above. Any such layer is preferably formed by a dry film formation method.

A polyester film having specific characteristics is used as a transparent substrate film of the transparent conductive polyester film of the present invention.

The transparent substrate film of the transparent conductive polyester film of the present invention is sometimes referred to simply as “transparent substrate film” or “polyester film”.

The polyester film may be a monolayered film formed of one or more kinds of polyester resins. When two or more kinds of polyester resins are used, the polyester film may be a multilayered film or an ultra-multilayered lamination film having a repeating structure.

Examples of the polyester resin to be used in the polyester film include polyethylene terephthalate, polybutylene terephthalate, polyethylene-2,6-naphthalate, and a polyester film formed of a copolymer containing the component of any such resin as a main component. Of those, a stretched polyethylene terephthalate film is particularly preferred from the viewpoints of, for example, mechanical properties, heat resistance, transparency, and price.

When the polyester copolymer is used in the polyester film, examples of the dicarboxylic acid component of the polyester include: aliphatic dicarboxylic acids, such as adipic acid and sebacic acid; aromatic dicarboxylic acids, such as terephthalic acid, isophthalic acid, phthalic acid, and 2,6-naphthalene dicarboxylic acid; and multifunctional carboxylic acids, such as trimellitic acid and pyromellitic acid. In addition, examples of the glycol component of the polyester include: fatty acid glycols, such as ethylene glycol, diethylene glycol, 1,4-butanediol, propylene glycol, and neopentyl glycol; aromatic glycols, such as p-xylene glycol; alicyclic glycols, such as 1,4-cyclohexanedimethanol; and polyethylene glycols each having an average molecular weight of from 150 to 20,000. The mass ratio of the copolymer component of the copolymer is preferably less than 20 mass %. A case in which the mass ratio is less than 20 mass % is preferred because film strength, transparency, and heat resistance are retained.

In addition, in the production of the polyester film, at least one kind of resin pellet preferably has a limiting viscosity of from 0.50 dl/g to 1.0 dl/g. A case in which the limiting viscosity is 0.50 dl/g or more is preferred because the impact resistance of a film to be obtained is improved, and hence breakage of a circuit in the display due to an external impact hardly occurs. Meanwhile, a case in which the limiting viscosity is 1.00 dl/g or less is preferred because film production can be easily operated in a stable manner without an excessively large increase in filtration pressure of molten fluid.

The thickness of the polyester film is preferably from 10 μm to 300 μm, more preferably from 10 μm to 80 μm, still more preferably from 25 μm to 75 μm. When the thickness is 10 μm or more, impact resistance and bending resistance can be satisfied. When the thickness is 300 μm or less, there is an advantage in terms of weight reduction, and excellent flexibility, processability, handleability, and the like are obtained.

The surface of the polyester film of the present invention may be smooth or uneven. However, decreased optical properties due to unevenness are not preferred because the film is used for a touchscreen of a display. A haze is preferably 3% or less, more preferably 2% or less, most preferably 1% or less. When the haze is 3% or less, the visibility of an image can be improved. The lower limit of the haze is desirably as small as possible, but is preferably 0.1% or more from the viewpoint of stable production, and may be 0.3% or more.

From the purpose of reducing the haze as described above, the unevenness of the film surface is preferably not so large. However, to provide the film with moderate slipperiness for the viewpoints of adhesiveness with the transparent conductive layer and handleability, unevenness may be formed on the film surface by blending particles into the polyester resin layer serving as the surface layer, or by coating the polyester resin layer with a particle-containing coating layer during a film formation process.

A known method may be adopted as a method of blending particles into the polyester resin layer. For example, the particles, which may be added in any stage of polyester production, may be preferably added in the form of a slurry prepared by dispersing the particles in, for example, ethylene glycol in the stage of esterification, in a stage after the completion of a transesterification reaction, or in a stage before the start of a polycondensation reaction to advance the polycondensation reaction. Alternatively, the particles may be added by, for example, a method of blending a slurry prepared by dispersing the particles in, for example, ethylene glycol or water with a polyester material by using a kneading extruder with a vent, or a method of blending dry particles with a polyester material by using a kneading extruder.

In particular, preferred is a method involving: homogeneously dispersing the aggregates of inorganic particles in a monomer solution, which is part of a polyester material; then filtering the dispersion; and adding the filtrate to the remainder of the polyester material before, during, or after an esterification reaction. This method, due to the low viscosity of the monomer solution, enables homogeneous dispersion of particles and high-precision filtration of the slurry in a simple manner, while ensuring excellent particle dispersibility and low likeliness of the occurrence of new aggregates when the particles are added to the remainder of the polyester material. From such viewpoints, it is particularly preferred to add the particles to the remainder of the polyester material in a low-temperature state before the esterification reaction.

In addition, the number of protrusions on the surface of the film may be further reduced by a method involving preparing a particle-containing polyester beforehand, and then subjecting pellets of the particle-containing polyester and particle-free pellets to kneading extrusion or the like (master batch method).

In addition, the polyester film may contain various additives within the range in which a preferred range of a total light transmittance is maintained. Examples of the additives include an antistatic agent, a UV absorber, and a stabilizer.

The polyester film has a total light transmittance of preferably 85% or more, more preferably 87% or more. When the transmittance is 85% or more, visibility can be sufficiently ensured. The total light transmittance of the polyester film may be said to be desirably as high as possible, but is preferably 99% or less from the viewpoint of stable production, and may be 97% or less.

The maximum heat shrinkage ratio of the polyester film after heat treatment at 150° C. for 30 minutes is preferably 6% or less, more preferably 5% or less. When the heat shrinkage ratio is 6% or less, a flat surface failure such as curling or waviness at the time of processing for laminating a hard coating layer or at the time of processing for providing the transparent conductive layer can be suppressed. The heat shrinkage ratio may be said to be desirably as low as possible, but is preferably −1% or more, more preferably 0% or more. The minus in this case means expansion after heating, and the flat surface failure may also occur when the heat shrinkage ratio is less than −1%.

After the lamination of a hard coating layer on the polyester film to be used for the transparent conductive polyester film of the foldable display of the present invention, a sufficient pencil hardness can be imparted to the hard coating film. After the lamination of a hard coating layer on a related-art polyester film, it is conceived that, in pencil hardness evaluation of the pencil hardness of the hard coating film, the pencil hardness is reduced owing to deformation of the film in its thickness direction. In the present invention, when an indentation depth after test force unloading in the film thickness direction with a dynamic ultramicrohardness meter to be described later is set to fall within a specific range, a high hardness can be achieved in the pencil hardness evaluation of the hard coating film. The indentation depth after test force unloading in the film thickness direction is preferably 1.5 μm or less, more preferably 1.4 μm or less, still more preferably 1.3 μm or less. When the indentation depth after test force unloading (final deformation amount under loading) is 1.5 μm or less, in the pencil hardness evaluation of the hard coating film after the lamination of the hard coating layer, the film is hardly deformed in its thickness direction, and hence the pencil hardness can be increased. When the pencil hardness of the hard coating film can be increased, the surface of the display hardly has a scratch or a dent, and hence the visibility of the display is improved. The indentation depth after test force unloading may be said to be desirably as low as possible, but is preferably 0.3 μm or more, more preferably 0.5 μm or more from the viewpoints of stable production and saturation of the effect.

In order to reduce the indentation depth after test force unloading, it is effective to adjust a refractive index in the thickness direction to 1.520 or less. Means for adjusting the refractive index to 1.520 or less may be exemplified by condition settings, such as adjusting stretching ratios in a bending direction and a folding direction to high ratios, setting stretching temperatures in the bending direction and the folding direction to low temperatures, and setting a heat fixation temperature to a high temperature, within ranges in which other physical properties, and refractive indices in the bending direction and the folding direction, which are described later, can be controlled to preferred ranges.

The surface of the polyester film of the present invention may be subjected to treatment for improving adhesiveness with a resin for forming, for example, the hard coating layer, or the transparent conductive layer.

Examples of surface treatment methods include: unevenness-forming treatment by sandblasting treatment, solvent treatment, or the like; and oxidation treatment, such as corona discharge treatment, electron beam irradiation treatment, plasma treatment, ozone/UV irradiation treatment, flame treatment, chromic acid treatment, or hot air treatment. Those methods may be used without any particular limitation.

In addition, adhesiveness may also be improved by an adhesion-improving layer, such as an easy-to-adhere layer. Resins such as an acrylic resin, a polyester resin, a polyurethane resin, and a polyether resin may be used for the easy-to-adhere layer without any particular limitation. The easy-to-adhere layer may be formed by a general coating method, preferably a so-called in-line coating formulation.

In addition, the polyester film in the present invention may be provided with the hard coating layer. When the polyester film is used as the transparent conductive layer of the touchscreen module, a refractive index adjusting layer may be arranged between the substrate film and the transparent electrode layer in order to make the electrode pattern less visible. In that case, the hard coating layer itself may double as the refractive index adjusting layer, or a separate refractive index adjusting layer may be further laminated. In addition, in order to improve the bending resistance and impact resistance of the transparent conductive layer itself, the hard coating layer may be arranged to adjust the elastic modulus of the film as a whole.

The above-mentioned polyester film may be produced, for example, through: a polymerization step of homogenously dispersing inorganic particles in a monomer solution, which is part of a polyester material, filtering the dispersion, and then adding the filtrate to the remainder of the polyester material to polymerize a polyester; and a film-forming step of melt-extruding the polyester into a sheet shape through a filter, cooling the sheet, and then stretching the cooled sheet to form a substrate film.

Next, a method of producing the polyester film is described in detail with an example in which pellets of polyethylene terephthalate (hereinafter sometimes referred to as “PET”) are used as a material for a substrate film. However, the method is not limited to this example. In addition, the example is not intended to limit the number of layers such as a monolayer structure or a multilayer structure.

After a predetermined proportion of PET pellets are mixed and dried, the mixture is fed to a known extruder for melting and laminating, and extruded from a slit die into a sheet shape, followed by cooling and solidifying the sheet on a casting roll to form an unstretched film. A monolayer may be produced with a single extruder. A multilayered (i.e., including two or more layers) film may be produced by: laminating a plurality of film layers for forming an outermost layer using two or more extruders, a multilayered manifold, or a confluence block (e.g., a confluence block with a square joint); extruding a sheet of two or more layers from a mouthpiece; and cooling the sheet on a casting roll to form an unstretched film.

In this case, it is preferred to perform high-precision filtration to remove foreign matter contained in the resin at any portion of the extruder at which the molten resin is maintained at about 280° C. during melt-extrusion. A filtering medium to be used in the high-precision filtration of the molten resin is not particularly limited, but is preferably a filtering medium of a stainless-steel sintered body because of its excellent performance for removing an aggregate containing Si, Ti, Sb, Ge, or Cu as a main component and organic matter having a high melting point.

Further, the filtering medium has a filtered particle size (initial filtration efficiency: 95%) of preferably 20 μm or less, particularly preferably 15 μm or less. When the filtered particle size (initial filtration efficiency: 95%) of the filtering medium is more than 20 μm, foreign matter having a size of 20 μm or more cannot be sufficiently removed. Although high-precision filtration of a molten resin using a filtering medium having a filtered particle size (initial filtration efficiency: 95%) of 20 μm or less may reduce productivity, such filtering medium is preferred from the viewpoint of obtaining a film having fewer protrusions caused by coarse particles.

With Regard to Refractive Index in Bending Direction

In the present invention, the refractive index of the polyester film in at least any one of its longitudinal direction (machine direction) and width direction is preferably from 1.590 to 1.620, more preferably from 1.591 to 1.600. In addition, the refractive index of the polyester film in its bending direction is preferably from 1.590 to 1.620, more preferably from 1.591 to 1.600. Herein, as denoted by reference numeral 22 on a polyester film (reference numeral 2) in FIG. 2, the “bending direction” refers to a direction orthogonal to a folding portion (reference numeral 21) assumed in a foldable display application. A case in which the refractive index in at least any one of the longitudinal direction and the width direction is from 1.590 to 1.620 is preferred because deformation at the time of repeated folding is reduced to preclude a risk of reducing the image quality of the foldable display. The refractive index is more preferably from 1.591 to 1.600. Of course, the direction of the refractive index is preferably the above-mentioned bending direction. When the refractive index is 1.590 or more, there is no risk of cracking in the folding portion direction after a bending test to be described later, and as a matter of course, fracture does not occur either. Accordingly, the visibility of the display can be kept satisfactory. The refractive index of the polyester film can be effectively adjusted by adjusting the stretching ratios and the stretching temperatures. In addition, a relaxation step in a stretching direction or multi-stage stretching may be used in order to adjust the refractive index. When the multi-stage stretching is performed, it is preferred that a stretching ratio in a second or later stage be set to be higher than a stretching ratio in a first stage.

Fatigue due to a compressive stress applied to the inside of folding at the time of folding can be reduced by controlling the refractive index of the polyester film in at least any one of its longitudinal direction (machine direction) and width direction within the above-mentioned ranges, more preferably by controlling the refractive index in the bending direction within the above-mentioned ranges. The fatigue due to the compressive stress is considered to occur mainly in a crystalline portion, and a reduction in amount of crystals in the bending direction reduces the fatigue. Accordingly, it is conceived that, when the refractive index is decreased, the amount of crystals oriented in the bending direction is reduced to suppress the compression fatigue.

In addition, a creep phenomenon caused by a tensile stress applied to the outside of folding at the time of folding can be suppressed by reducing the refractive index. Fatigue due to the tensile stress is considered to occur mainly in an amorphous portion, and alignment of molecular chains due to repeatedly applied stress occurs to cause deformation. Presumably, as the number of molecular chains arranged in the bending direction becomes smaller, the deformation caused by the alignment reduces. In addition, as the amount of the amorphous portion becomes smaller, the tensile fatigue can be suppressed more, and hence a higher crystallinity, that is, a higher density is preferred.

In the present invention, the stretching ratio of an unstretched polyester sheet in at least any one of the longitudinal direction (machine direction) and the width direction is set to preferably from 1.2 times to 2.0 times, more preferably from 1.7 times to 2.0 times. In addition, the stretching direction is preferably the above-mentioned bending direction. A case in which the stretching ratio is 1.2 times or more is preferred because no deformation occurs in post-processing, such as hard coating application, and a case in which the stretching ratio is 2.0 times or less is preferred because thickness unevenness is prevented from occurring in the film. A stretching temperature is preferably from 75° C. to 120° C., more preferably from 75° C. to 105° C. Hitherto known means, such as a hot-air heating system, a roll heating system, or an infrared heating system, may be adopted as a heating method at the time of the stretching. When the stretching temperature is set to from 75° C. to 120° C., large thickness unevenness due to the stretching at the above-mentioned stretching ratio can be prevented. In addition, when the stretching is performed at as low a temperature as possible within a range in which large thickness unevenness is prevented from occurring as described above, the refractive index in the thickness direction can be reduced.

With Regard to Refractive Index in Folding Portion Direction

The refractive index in the direction orthogonal to the above-mentioned direction in which the refractive index of the polyester film is from 1.590 to 1.620 is preferably from 1.670 to 1.700. That is, the refractive index in the direction (folding portion direction) orthogonal to the bending direction is preferably from 1.670 to 1.700. When the refractive index is set to from 1.670 to 1.700, deformation at the time of folding in the bending direction can be reduced. When the refractive index is set to 1.700 or less, cracking or fracturing in the folding portion direction can be suppressed. When the refractive index is set to 1.670 or more, bendability in the bending direction can be improved, and impact resistance and surface hardness can be improved. The refractive index is more preferably from 1.680 to 1.695. As a method of adjusting the refractive index in the direction orthogonal to the bending direction, there are given a stretching ratio, a stretching preheating temperature, a stretching temperature, multi-stage stretching, and film relaxation. The stretching ratio is preferably from 4.0 times to 6.0 times, more preferably from 4.4 times to 6.0 times. In addition, the stretching preheating temperature in the direction orthogonal to the bending direction is preferably from 70° C. to 110° C. When multi-stage stretching is performed in the direction orthogonal to the bending direction, it is preferred that a stretching ratio in a second or later stage be set to be higher than that in a first stage. The film may be relaxed by from 1% to 10% in each of the machine direction (longitudinal direction) and the perpendicular direction (width direction).

With Regard to Refractive Index in Thickness Direction

The refractive index in the thickness direction is preferably 1.520 or less. This is because, when the refractive index is set to 1.520 or less, even if the refractive index in the bending direction is designed to be low, reductions in impact resistance and surface hardness of the film can be suppressed, and hence bendability, impact resistance, and surface hardness can all be achieved. When the refractive index is set to 1.520 or less, the indentation depth after test force unloading in the thickness direction can be reduced to improve the hardness of the film surface, in particular, to prevent the transparent conductive polyester film from being broken or torn after the lamination of the transparent conductive layer. The refractive index is more preferably 1.515 or less, still more preferably 1.510 or less, particularly preferably 1.505 or less, most preferably 1.500 or less. The refractive index in the thickness direction is preferably low, but is preferably 1.3 or more from the viewpoint of stable production, and may be 1.4 or more. The refractive index is particularly preferably 1.410 or more. The above-mentioned range may be said to be achievable by increasing both of the stretching ratios in the bending direction and the folding direction, but in order to control the refractive index in the thickness direction while controlling the refractive indices in the bending direction and the width direction to preferred ranges, it is preferred to set conditions while checking a balance among the conditions of the steps of a film formation process.

As a method of controlling the refractive index in the thickness direction to the above-mentioned ranges, there is given a stretching preheating temperature, the stretching temperature, or the stretching ratio in the bending direction, the stretching preheating temperature or the stretching temperature in the folding portion direction, multi-stage stretching, high-ratio stretching, or a temperature setting for heat fixation. The stretching preheating temperature in the bending direction is preferably from 70° C. to 110° C. The stretching temperature in the bending direction is preferably from 75° C. to 120° C. The stretching ratio in the bending direction is preferably from 1.2 times to 2.0 times, more preferably from 1.7 times to 2.0 times. When stretching is performed at a low stretching temperature and a low stretching ratio, the refractive index in the thickness direction can be effectively decreased while the bendability in the bending direction is maintained. The stretching preheating temperature in the folding portion direction is also preferably from 75° C. to 110° C. The stretching temperature is preferably from 75° C. to 120° C. The stretching ratio in the folding portion is preferably from 4.0 times to 6.0 times, more preferably from 4.4 times to 6.0 times. While the refractive index in the bending direction is maintained or reduced, the refractive index in the thickness direction can be effectively reduced. Multi-stage stretching may be used as a method for high-ratio stretching. In that case, a stretching ratio in a second stage is preferably set to be higher than a stretching ratio in a first stage because the refractive index can be effectively controlled. In addition, a system involving performing stretching again after a crystallization step may be used. Accelerated stretching involving increasing stretching speed from an early stage of stretching to a late stage may be used.

The heat fixation temperature is preferably from 180° C. to 240° C. When heat fixation is performed, crystallization oriented in the stretching direction can proceed to decrease the refractive index in the thickness direction.

The reason why the impact resistance and surface hardness of the film are improved by decreasing the refractive index in the thickness direction is not necessarily clear, but it is conceivable that aromatics, such as benzene rings, in molecular chains are oriented in a plane direction to exhibit a suppressing effect on deformation due to stress applied in the thickness direction.

With Regard to Density of Polyester Film

The density of the polyester film is preferably 1.380 g/cm³ or more. The density is more preferably 1.383 g/cm³ or more. When the density is set to 1.380 g/cm³ or more, the bendability and impact resistance of the film can be improved. In particular, the transparent conductive polyester film can be prevented from being broken or torn after the lamination of the conductive film. The density is preferably as high as possible, and is preferably 1.40 g/cm³ or less, though somewhat depending on, for example, the presence or absence of particles in the film. When the heat fixation temperature at the time of film formation is set to from 180° C. to 240° C., crystallization can be caused to proceed to effectively increase the density.

The bending direction of the polyester film is preferably caused to correspond to its longitudinal direction (machine direction). With this configuration, the refractive index in the bending direction can be easily decreased in second-axial stretching, and hence the bendability can be easily improved. That is, a preferred polyester film is obtained by stretching the unstretched polyester sheet in its longitudinal direction at a stretching ratio of from 1.2 times to 2.0 times, more preferably from 1.7 times to 2.0 times. In addition, it may be said that a preferred mode involves performing stretching in the width direction at a stretching ratio of from 4.0 times to 6.0 times, more preferably from 4.4 times to 6.0 times.

In addition, in the present invention, it may be said that, in a particularly preferred mode, the polyester film is caused to simultaneously have the following four characteristics:

(1) the refractive index in the bending direction is from 1.590 to 1.620;

(2) the refractive index in the folding portion direction is from 1.670 to 1.700; (3) the refractive index in the thickness direction is 1.520 or less; and

(4) the density is 1.380 g/cm³ or more.

However, even in the case of a combination within the ranges of the above-mentioned preferred production conditions, when the combination is a combination of conditions that cannot be said to be the best within the respective preferred production condition ranges, such as a combination of a stretching ratio in the bending direction of 1.4 times or less, a stretching ratio in the folding portion direction of less than 4.4 times, and a heat fixation temperature of 220° C. or less, a polyester film that simultaneously satisfies the above-mentioned four characteristics may not be necessarily obtained in some cases. In this case, the above-mentioned four characteristics can be simultaneously satisfied through a fine adjustment of any one of the conditions, such as an increase in stretching ratio in the bending direction to 1.7 times or more, an increase in stretching ratio in the folding portion direction to 4.4 times or more, an increase in heat fixation temperature to about 230° C., or a decrease in stretching temperature in the bending direction and/or the folding portion direction, or a combination thereof.

In order to adjust film formability, film strength, thermal dimensional stability, appearance failure, and the like, any film formation system involving, for example, stretching, relaxation, heat fixation, and surface treatment may be adopted, but it may be said that the control of the refractive indices and density of the film to the above-mentioned preferred ranges is a particularly preferred mode in the present invention. When the refractive indices and the density are controlled to the preferred ranges, there can be provided a polyester film suitable for a foldable display, which can obtain bending resistance and surface hardness superior to those of the related-art film, in particular, a high pencil hardness of the hard coating film after the lamination of the hard coating layer.

Specifically, for example, after the pellets of PET are sufficiently dried in vacuum, the pellets are fed into an extruder, and melt-extruded in a sheet shape at about 280° C., followed by cooling and solidifying the sheet to form an unstretched PET sheet. The obtained unstretched sheet is stretched at a ratio of from 1.2 times to 2.0 times, more preferably from 1.7 times to 2.0 times in the longitudinal direction with rolls heated to from 75° C. to 120° C. to obtain a uniaxially oriented PET film. Further, the film is held with clips at the end portions thereof, guided to a hot air zone heated to from 75° C. to 120° C., dried, and then stretched at a ratio of from 4.0 times to 6.0 times, more preferably from 4.4 times to 6.0 times in the width direction. Subsequently, the film may be guided to a heat treatment zone at from 180° C. to 240° C., and treated with heat for 1 second to 60 seconds. During this heat treatment step, the film may be subjected to relaxation treatment by from 0% to 10% in the width direction or the longitudinal direction as required.

The limiting viscosity of the polyester film preferably falls within the range of from 0.50 dl/g to 1.0 dl/g. A case in which the limiting viscosity is 0.50 dl/g or more is preferred because impact resistance is improved, and hence breakage of a circuit in the display due to an external impact hardly occurs. Meanwhile, a case in which the limiting viscosity is 1.00 dl/g or less is preferred because film production is stabilized without an excessively large increase in filtration pressure of molten fluid.

Easy-to-Adhere Layer

In the present invention, in order to improve an adhesive property between the polyester film and the transparent conductive layer, the hard coating layer, or the like, it is also preferred to laminate an easy-to-adhere layer on the polyester film. The easy-to-adhere layer may be obtained by applying an application liquid for forming the easy-to-adhere layer to one surface or both surfaces of an unstretched or longitudinally uniaxially stretched film, then drying the application liquid through heat treatment as required, and stretching the film in at least one unstretched direction. Heat treatment may also be performed after biaxial stretching. The final application amount of the easy-to-adhere layer is preferably controlled to from 0.005 g/m² to 0.20 g/m². A case in which the application amount is 0.005 g/m² or more is preferred because an adhesive property is obtained. Meanwhile, a case in which the application amount is 0.20 g/m² or less is preferred because blocking resistance is obtained.

As a resin that is incorporated into the application liquid to be used in the lamination of the easy-to-adhere layer, resins such as a polyester-based resin, a polyether polyurethane-based resin, a polyester polyurethane resin, a polycarbonate polyurethane resin, and an acrylic resin may be used without any particular limitation. Examples of a crosslinking agent that is incorporated into the application liquid for forming the easy-to-adhere layer include a melamine compound, an isocyanate compound, an oxazoline compound, an epoxy compound, and a carbodiimide compound. A mixture of two or more kinds may be used as each of the resin and the crosslinking agent. Those materials are preferably applied as an aqueous application liquid because of the properties of in-line coating, and the resin and the crosslinking agent are preferably a water-soluble or water-dispersible resin and compound.

Particles are preferably added to the easy-to-adhere layer in order to impart an easy slipping property. The average particle diameter of the fine particles is preferably 2 μm or less. When the average particle diameter of the particles is more than 2 μm, the particles are liable to fall out of the easy-to-adhere layer. Examples of the particles that are incorporated into the easy-to-adhere layer include: inorganic particles, such as titanium dioxide, barium sulfate, calcium carbonate, calcium sulfate, silica, alumina, talc, kaolin, clay, calcium phosphate, mica, hectorite, zirconia, tungsten oxide, lithium fluoride, and calcium fluoride; and organic polymer-based particles, such as styrene-based particles, acrylic particles, melamine-based particles, benzoguanamine-based particles, and silicone-based particles. Those particles may be added alone or in combination thereof to the easy-to-adhere layer.

In addition, a known method may be used as a method of applying the application liquid as in the case of the application layer described above. Examples thereof include a reverse roll coating method, a gravure coating method, a kiss coating method, a roll brush coating method, a spray coating method, an air knife coating method, a wire bar coating method, and a pipe doctor method. Those methods may be performed alone or in combination thereof.

Hard Coating Layer

The polyester film preferably has the hard coating layer on at least one surface thereof for the purpose of adjusting the refractive indices or improving bending resistance or breakage tear resistance. When the hard coating layer is present between the polyester film and the transparent conductive layer, the adverse influence of an oligomer precipitated from the polyester film can be blocked by the hard coating layer. The hard coating layer is preferably used by being positioned on the polyester film or on the easy-to-adhere layer. As a resin for forming the hard coating layer, resins such as an acrylic resin, a siloxane-based resin, an inorganic hybrid-based resin, a urethane acrylate-based resin, a polyester acrylate-based resin, and an epoxy-based resin may be used without any particular limitation. In addition, a mixture of two or more materials may be used, and particles such as an inorganic filler and an organic filler may be added.

Thickness of Hard Coating Layer

The thickness of the hard coating layer is preferably from 1 μm to 50 μm. A case in which the thickness is 1 μm or more is preferred because sufficient curing occurs to increase pencil hardness. In addition, when the thickness is set to 50 μm or less, curling caused by hardening and contraction of the hard coating can be suppressed, and thus film handleability can be increased.

Application Method

As a method of applying the hard coating layer, for example, a Meyer bar, a gravure coater, a die coater, and a knife coater may be used without any particular limitation and may be appropriately selected in accordance with viscosity and thickness.

Curing Condition

As a method of curing the hard coating layer, for example, a curing method using energy beams, such as UV light or electron beams, or a curing method using heat may be used. In order to reduce damage to the film, a curing method using UV light or electron beams is preferred.

Pencil Hardness

The pencil hardness of the hard coating layer is preferably 3 H or more, more preferably 4 H or more. When the pencil hardness is 3 H or more, the hard coating layer is prevented from being easily scratched, and the visibility is not decreased. The pencil hardness of the hard coating layer is generally preferably as high as possible. However, the pencil hardness may be 9 H or less or 8 H or less, and even a hard coating layer having a pencil hardness of 6 H or less is usable in practice without problems.

Characteristics of Hard Coating Layer

The hard coating layer in the present invention may be used for the purpose of, for example, adjusting the refractive indices, improving bending resistance or breakage/tear resistance, improving surface hardness, or blocking the adverse influence of an oligomer precipitated from polyester on the transparent conductive layer as described above, and preferably has a high transmittance when used in a display. The transmittance of the hard coating film is preferably 87% or more, more preferably 88% or more. When the transmittance is 87% or more, sufficient visibility is obtained. The total light transmittance of the hard coating film is generally preferably as high as possible, but is preferably 99% or less from the viewpoint of stable production, and may be 97% or less. In addition, the haze of the hard coating film is generally preferably low, and is preferably 3% or less. The haze of the hard coating film is more preferably 2% or less, most preferably 1% or less. When the haze is 3% or less, the visibility of an image can be improved. The haze is generally desirably as low as possible, but is preferably 0.1% or more from the viewpoint of stable production, and may be 0.3% or more.

The hard coating layer may further have any other function imparted thereto. For example, hard coating layers each having functionality imparted thereto, such as an antiglare layer, an antiglare antireflection layer, an antireflection layer, a low-reflection layer, and an antistatic layer each having such a function of adjusting certain refractive indices or improving bending resistance or breakage/tear resistance as described above, are also preferably applied in the present invention.

The polyester film may be provided with the hard coating layer. It is also preferred that the polyester film be provided with a refractive index adjusting layer between the polyester film and the transparent conductive layer or between the hard coating layer and the transparent electrode layer, as the transparent conductive layer of a touchscreen module, in order to make the electrode pattern less visible. In that, case, the hard coating layer itself may double as the refractive index adjusting layer, or a separate refractive index adjusting layer may be further laminated. Examples of the refractive index adjusting layer include: a resin layer containing the above-mentioned particles for refractive index adjustment; a fluorine-containing resin layer; and layers of, for example, resins each having a high refractive index obtained by incorporating an aromatic ring, a sulfur atom, or a bromine atom into resin materials, such as an aromatic polyimide resin, an epoxy resin, a (meth)acrylic resin (acrylate or methacrylate compound), a polyester resin, and a urethane resin, and precursors thereof. Any such layer may be formed by application. In addition, an inorganic layer of, for example, ZnO, CeO₂, Sb₂O₃, SnO₂, indium tin oxide, In₂O₃, Al₂O₃, antimony-doped tin oxide, aluminum-doped zinc oxide, SiO₂, or magnesium fluoride is also preferred as the refractive index adjusting layer, and such layer may be formed by a wet film formation method.

Preferred examples of the laminated structure of the transparent conductive polyester film in the present invention include: polyester film/transparent conductive layer; polyester film/easy-to-adhere layer/transparent conductive layer; polyester film/hard coating layer/transparent conductive layer; polyester film/easy-to-adhere layer/hard coating layer/transparent conductive layer; polyester film/refractive index adjusting layer (one layer or plurality of layers having different refractive indices)/transparent conductive layer; polyester film/easy-to-adhere layer/refractive index adjusting layer (one layer or plurality of layers having different refractive indices)/transparent conductive layer; polyester film/hard coating layer/refractive index adjusting layer (one layer or plurality of layers having different refractive indices)/transparent conductive layer; and polyester film/easy-to-adhere layer/hard coating layer/refractive index adjusting layer (one layer or plurality of layers having different refractive indices)/transparent conductive layer. A combination of those laminated structures may be present on one surface of the polyester film, or may be present on both surfaces via the polyester film.

In a touchscreen module of a foldable display of the present invention, the transparent conductive polyester film of the present invention is used as a transparent conductive polyester film included in the touchscreen module, but does not need to be used for all transparent conductive polyester films included in the touchscreen module. In the touchscreen module of the foldable display, in addition to the polyester film of the present invention, a polyimide film, a polyamide film, a polyamide imide film, a polyester film except the polyester film of the present invention, a polycarbonate film, an acrylic film, a triacetylcellulose film, a cycloolefin polymer film, a polyphenylene sulfide film, a polymethylpentene film, or the like may be appropriately used as a transparent substrate film of the transparent conductive polyester film depending on its suitability.

EXAMPLES

Next, the present invention is described by way of Examples and Comparative Examples. First, methods of evaluating characteristic values performed in the present invention are shown below.

(1) Limiting Viscosity

A film or a polyester resin was pulverized and dried, and then dissolved in a mixed solvent of phenol/tetrachloroethane=60/40 (mass ratio). After this solution was centrifuged to remove inorganic particles, the flow time of the solution having a concentration of 0.4 (g/dl) at 30° C. and the flow time of the solvent alone were measured with an Ubbelohde viscometer. From a time ratio therebetween, the limiting viscosity was calculated using the Huggins equation on the assumption that the constant of the Huggins equation was 0.38.

(2) Bending Resistance of Polyester Film Sample (Bend Radius: 1.5 mm)

A polyester film sample having a size of 20 mm in its width direction and 110 mm in its machine direction was prepared. The sample was bent 200,000 times at a rate of once per second using a tension-free U-shape folding test jig (DLDMLH-FS manufactured by Yuasa System Co., Ltd.) with the bend radius being set to 1.5 mm. In that case, the sample was fixed at a position of 10 mm from both end portions of the long side, and the portion to be bent was 20 mm×90 mm. Here, FIG. 1 is a schematic view for illustrating a bend radius at a time when a foldable display is folded, and in consideration of a case in which a polyester film is arranged on the inside surface of the folded mode, the bending test is performed as a model assuming that the portion denoted by reference numeral 11 in FIG. 1 is set to 1.5 mm. After the completion of the bending treatment, the sample was placed on a flat surface with its bending inside facing down, and was visually observed.

○: No crack and deformation can be recognized on the sample.

x: The sample has a crack or a fold mark, and has a maximum floating height of 5 mm or more when horizontally placed.

(3) Bending Resistance of Polyester Film Sample (Bend Radius: 0.5 mm)

A polyester film sample was bent 200,000 times at a rate of once per second by the same method as in the above-mentioned bending test with the bend radius being set to 0.5 mm. Here, FIG. 1 is a schematic view for illustrating a bend radius at a time when a foldable display is folded, and in consideration of a case in which a polyester film is arranged on the inside surface of the folded mode, the bending test is performed as a model assuming that the portion denoted by reference numeral 11 in FIG. 1 is set to 0.5 mm. The film surface on the outside of the bent portion was observed with a digital microscope (RH8800 manufactured by Hirox Co., Ltd.) at a magnification of 700, and the presence or absence of a wrinkle (crack) was observed. Separate from the above-mentioned bending resistance visual observation test at a bend radius of 1.5 mm, this test, in which the bend radius was reduced to 0.5 mm, was performed with the intention of performing evaluation under a state closer to the state of actual use of a foldable display having a hard coating layer and other members laminated or bonded thereto. Separate from the above-mentioned visual observation at a bend radius of 1.5 mm, this test is intended to detect a defect of being liable to be fractured or being liable to be cracked, which is a minute defect difficult to detect by visual observation.

○: No defect is found on the film surface on the outside of the bending.

x: Fracture occurred, or a wrinkle (crack) can be recognized on the film surface on the outside of the bending.

(4) Bending Resistance of Transparent Conductive Polyester Film Sample (Bend Radius: 3.0 mm)

A film was bent 200,000 times at a rate of once per second by the same method as in the above-mentioned bending test with the bend radius being set to 3.0 mm. A test in which a conductive film was positioned on the inside, and a test in which the conductive film was positioned on the outside were each performed.

○: The conductive film is free of breakage or a tear, and it cannot be recognized that the transparent conductive polyester film is deformed.

x: It can be recognized that the conductive film is broken, fractured, or peeled from the substrate, or it can be recognized that the transparent conductive polyester film is deformed.

(5) Refractive Index

A refractive index in a longitudinal direction, a refractive index in a width direction, and a refractive index in a thickness direction were determined using an Abbe refractometer (NAR-4T manufactured by Atago Co., Ltd., measurement wavelength: 589 nm) in conformity with JIS K 7142:2008 “Determination of the refractive index of plastics (Method A).”

(6) Pencil Hardness

The pencil hardness of a hard coating film was measured as a sample at a rate of 1.0 mm/s under a load of 750 g in conformity with JIS K 5600-5-4:1999. In the present invention, 3 H or more was regarded as acceptable.

(7) Total Light Transmittance and Haze

Measurement was performed using a haze meter (NDH 5000 manufactured by Nippon Denshoku Industries Co., Ltd.)

(8) Density

A density was measured in accordance with a method in conformity with JIS K 7112:1999 (density gradient tube method). (Unit: g/cm³).

(9) Indentation Depth after Test Force Unloading

A sample was cut into a square about 2 cm on a side, and its surface opposite to a measurement surface was fixed onto a micro cover glass measuring 18 mm×18 mm (manufactured by Matsunami Glass Ind., Ltd.) with a tackifier (Cemedine (trademark) High-super 30). After the fixation by bonding, the whole was left to stand at room temperature for 12 hours or more, and then an indentation depth (μm) after test force unloading was measured using a dynamic ultramicrohardness meter “DUH-211” (manufactured by Shimadzu Corporation) under the following conditions.

Measurement Conditions

Test mode: loading-unloading test Indenter used: triangular pyramid indenter having an angle between ridges of 115° Elastic modulus of indenter: 1.140×10⁶ N/mm² Poisson's ratio of indenter: 0.07 Test force: 50 mN Loading speed: 4.44 mN/sec Loading retention time: 2 sec Unloading retention time: 0 sec

(10) Maximum Heat Shrinkage Ratio

A sample film was cut to measure 10 mm long by 250 mm wide. The long sides were aligned to a direction in which measurement was to be performed, the sample film was marked at an interval of 200 mm, and an interval A between the marks was measured under a constant tension of 5 g. Subsequently, the sample film was left to stand under no load in an oven having an atmosphere of 150° C. for 30 minutes, and was then removed from the oven and cooled to room temperature. After that, an interval B between the marks was determined under a constant tension of 5 g, and a heat shrinkage ratio (%) was determined by the following equation. For the heat shrinkage ratio, measurement is performed at positions equally dividing the sample film in its width direction into three parts, and the average value of three points is adopted as the heat shrinkage ratio (%).

Heatshrinkageratio(%) = [(A − B) × 100]/A

The sample film is separately cut so as to be different in length and width for each of both its bending direction and folding direction and subjected to measurement, and data in the direction in which the measured value is larger is adopted as a maximum heat shrinkage ratio (%).

Preparation of Polyethylene Terephthalate Pellets (a)

A continuous esterification reactor including a three-stage complete mixing vessel including a stirrer, a condenser, a raw material feeder, and a product extracting port was used as an esterification reactor. A slurry of TPA (2 tons/hr), EG (2 mol per mol of TPA), and antimony trioxide (160 ppm of Sb atoms based on produced PET) was continuously supplied to the first esterification reaction unit of the esterification reactor, and was allowed to react at 255° C. for an average residence time of 4 hours under normal pressure. Subsequently, the reaction product in the first esterification reaction unit was taken out of the system, and supplied to the second esterification reaction unit. EG evaporated from the first esterification reaction unit (8 mass % of the produced polymer (produced PET)) was supplied to the second esterification reaction unit. Further, an EG solution containing magnesium acetate such that the amount of Mg atoms was 65 ppm based on the produced PET and an EG solution containing TMPA such that the amount of P atoms was 20 ppm based on the produced PET were added thereto, and the mixture was reacted at 260° C. for an average residence time of 1.5 hours under normal pressure. Subsequently, the reaction product in the second esterification reaction unit was continuously taken out of the system and supplied to the third esterification reaction unit. An EG solution containing TMPA such that the amount of P atoms was 20 ppm based on the produced PET was further added thereto, followed by a reaction at 260° C. for an average residence time of 0.5 hour under normal pressure. The esterification reaction product generated in the third esterification reaction unit was continuously supplied to a three-stage continuous polycondensation reactor to perform polycondensation, followed by filtration through a filtering medium of a stainless-steel sintered body (nominal filtration accuracy: 5-μm particle 90% cut). Thus, polyethylene terephthalate pellets (a) having a limiting viscosity of 0.62 dl/g were obtained.

Preparation of Polyethylene Terephthalate Pellets (b)

Polyethylene terephthalate pellets (b) were obtained by adjusting the limiting viscosity to 0.580 dl/g by the same method as in the production process of the polyethylene terephthalate pellets (a) except that the residence time for the third esterification reaction was adjusted.

Preparation of Polyethylene Terephthalate Pellets (c)

The polyethylene terephthalate pellets (a) were subjected to solid-phase polymerization at 220° C. under a reduced pressure of 0.5 mmHg with a rotary vacuum polymerization apparatus while changing the reaction time. Thus, polyethylene terephthalate pellets (c) having a limiting viscosity of 0.75 dl/g were prepared.

Polymerization of Urethane Resin

A four-necked flask with a stirrer, a Dimroth condenser, a nitrogen inlet tube, a silica gel drying tube, and a temperature gauge was loaded with 72.96 parts by mass of 1,3-bis(isocyanatomethyl)cyclohexane, 12.60 parts by mass of dimethylol propionic acid, 11.74 parts by mass of neopentyl glycol, 112.70 parts by mass of a polycarbonate diol having a number-average molecular weight of 2,000, and 85.00 parts by mass of acetonitrile and 5.00 parts by mass of N-methylpyrrolidone serving as solvents. Under a nitrogen atmosphere, the mixture was stirred at 75° C. for 3 hours, and it was recognized that the reaction liquid had reached a predetermined amine equivalent. Next, the temperature of the reaction liquid was decreased to 40° C., and then 9.03 parts by mass of triethylamine was added to provide a polyurethane prepolymer D solution. Next, 450 g of water was added to a reaction vessel with a homodisper capable of high-speed stirring. The temperature was adjusted to 25° C., and water dispersion was performed by adding the isocyanate group-terminated prepolymer while the contents were mixed by stirring at 2,000 min−1. After that, some of the acetonitrile and the water were removed under reduced pressure to prepare a water-soluble polyurethane resin (A) having a solid content of 35 mass %.

Polymerization of Water-Soluble Carbodiimide Compound

A flask with a temperature gauge, a nitrogen gas inlet tube, a reflux condenser, a dropping funnel, and a stirrer was loaded with 200 parts by mass of isophorone diisocyanate and 4 parts by mass of 3-methyl-1-phenyl-2-phosphorene-1-oxide serving as a carbodiimidation catalyst, and the mixture was stirred under a nitrogen atmosphere at 180° C. for 10 hours to provide an isocyanate-terminated isophorone carbodiimide (degree of polymerization=5). Then, 111.2 g of the resultant carbodiimide and 80 g of polyethylene glycol monomethyl ether (molecular weight: 400) were subjected to a reaction at 100° C. for 24 hours. Water was gradually added thereto at 50° C. to provide a yellow transparent water-soluble carbodiimide compound (B) having a solid content of 40 mass %.

Preparation of Application Liquid for forming Easy-to-Adhere Layer

The following coating agents were mixed to prepare an application liquid.

Water 16.97 parts by mass Isopropanol 21.96 parts by mass Polyurethane resin (A) 3.27 parts by mass Water-soluble carbodiimide compound (B) 1.22 parts by mass Particles 0.51 part by mass (silica sol having an average particle diameter of 40 nm, solid content concentration: 40 mass %) Surfactant 0.05 part by mass (silicone-based, solid content concentration: 100 mass %)

Preparation of Hard Coating Application Liquid “a”

To 100 parts by mass of a hard coating material (OPSTAR (trademark) Z7503 manufactured by JSR Corporation, concentration: 75%), 0.1 part by mass of a leveling agent (BYK307 manufactured by BYK-Chemie Japan, concentration: 100%) was added, and the mixture was diluted with methyl ethyl ketone to prepare a hard coating application liquid “a” having a solid content concentration of 40 mass %.

Preparation of Hard Coating Application Liquid “b”

95 Parts by mass of pentaerythritol triacrylate (A-TMM-3 manufactured by Shin-Nakamura Chemical Co., Ltd., solid content concentration: 100%), 5 parts by mass of a photopolymerization initiator (Irgacure (trademark) 907 manufactured by BASF Japan, solid content concentration: 100%), and 0.1 part by mass of a leveling agent (BYK307 manufactured by BYK-Chemie Japan, solid content concentration: 100%) were mixed, and the mixture was diluted with a solvent of toluene/MEK=1/1 to prepare a hard coating application liquid “b” having a concentration of 40 mass %.

Preparation of Application Liquid Containing Metal Nanowire as Conductive Fibrous Filler

A mixed solution of 0.6 g of silver nitrate (manufactured by Wako Pure Chemical Industries, Ltd.), 36 g of a solution of 1.4 wt % of polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP, manufactured by Wako Pure Chemical Industries, Ltd., average molecular weight: 360,000) in ethylene glycol (EG, manufactured by Kishida Chemical Co., Ltd.), 4 g of a solution of 165 ppm of iron(III) chloride (manufactured by Kishida Chemical Co., Ltd.) in EG, and 109 g of EG was prepared and used as a reaction solution 1. The reaction solution 1 was increased in temperature from room temperature to 130° C. and subjected to a reaction for 187 minutes through use of a personal synthesizer (ChemiStation, PPV-CTRL1, manufactured by Tokyo Rikakikai Co., Ltd.).

A cylindrical paper filter (No. 86R, retained particle diameter: 1 μm, 20 mm×90 mm, manufactured by Advantec Toyo Kaisha, Ltd.) filled with 20 mL of the reaction solution 1 was placed in a 300 mL beaker, and isopropyl alcohol (manufactured by Junsei Chemical Co., Ltd.) was placed therein outside the cylindrical paper filter so as to have the same height as the reaction solution in the cylindrical paper filter. After 1 week, the solution in the cylindrical paper filter was collected and used as a metal nanowire-containing application liquid.

Example 1

The polyethylene terephthalate pellets (a) were fed to an extruder and melted at 285° C. The polymer was filtered through a filtering medium of a stainless-steel sintered body (nominal filtration accuracy: 10 μm-particle 95% cut) and extruded into a sheet shape from a mouthpiece, and then cooled and solidified through contact with a casting drum having a surface temperature of 30° C. using a static electricity applying casting method, to thereby produce an unstretched film. The unstretched film was uniformly heated to 75° C. using a heating roll, heated to 85° C. with a non-contact heater, and subjected to roll stretching (longitudinal stretching) at a ratio of 1.4 times. The above-mentioned application liquid for forming an easy-to-adhere layer was applied to both surfaces of the resultant uniaxially stretched film by a roll coating method, and was then dried at 80° C. for 20 seconds. An application amount after final (after biaxial stretching) drying was adjusted to 0.06 g/m². After that, the film was introduced into a tenter and preheated at 105° C., and then laterally stretched at 95° C. at a ratio of 4.0 times. The film was subjected to heat fixation at 230° C. for 5 seconds with its width fixed, and was relaxed by 4% in its width direction at 180° C. to provide a polyethylene terephthalate film having a thickness of 50 μm.

Examples 2 and 3

Polyester films were obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the stretching ratio in the longitudinal direction was changed as shown in Table 1.

Example 4

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the stretching ratio in the width direction was changed to 4.4 times, and the heat fixation temperature was changed to 220° C.

Examples 5 and 6

Polyester films were obtained in the same manner as in Example 4 except that the stretching ratio in the longitudinal direction was changed as shown in Table 1.

Example 7

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the stretching ratio in the width direction was changed to 5.5 times, and the heat fixation temperature was changed to 190° C.

Examples 8 and 9

Polyester films were obtained in the same manner as in Example 7 except that the stretching ratio in the longitudinal direction was changed as shown in Table 1.

Example 10

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 5 except that, in the production process of Example 5, 10% relaxation heat treatment was performed at 100° C. after the stretching in the longitudinal direction.

Example 11

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 5 except that, in the production process of Example 5, clips were released at 200° C. after the heat fixation, and relaxation heat treatment was performed in the longitudinal direction and the width direction. A tenter speed and a take-up roll speed were adjusted so as to achieve a relaxation ratio of 3% in the longitudinal direction. The relaxation in the width direction was performed so as to achieve a free state.

Example 12

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the temperature at the time of the stretching in the longitudinal direction was changed to 75° C., and the heat fixation temperature was changed to 220° C.

Example 13

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the stretching in the longitudinal direction was performed with the temperature at the time of the stretching being changed to 75° C. and the stretching ratio being changed to 1.2 times, and then the stretching in the width direction was performed with the stretching ratio being changed to 5.0 times.

Example 14

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 3 except that the stretching in the longitudinal direction of Example 3 was changed to two-stage stretching in which a stretching ratio in the first stage was set to 1.2 times and a stretching ratio in the second stage was set to 1.67 times. The total stretching ratio in the longitudinal direction is about 2.0 times.

Example 15

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 5 except that the preheating temperature at the time of the stretching in the width direction was changed to 95° C., and the heat fixation temperature was changed to 190° C.

Example 16

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 2 except that the stretching in the width direction of Example 2 was changed to two-stage stretching in which a stretching ratio in the first stage was set to 1.5 times and a stretching ratio in the second stage was set to 4.0 times, and the heat fixation temperature was changed to 190° C. The total stretching ratio in the width direction is 6.0 times.

Examples 17 and 18

Polyester films were obtained in the same manner as in Example 2 except that the thickness was changed as shown in Table 1.

Example 19

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except that, in the production process of Example 1, the relaxation heat treatment in the width direction was not performed.

Example 20

An unstretched film was produced in the same manner as in Example 1. After that, in a tenter, the unstretched film was preheated at 75° C. and laterally stretched at 85° C. at a ratio of 1.4 times. The above-mentioned application liquid for forming an easy-to-adhere layer was applied to both surfaces of the resultant uniaxially stretched film by a roll coating method, and was then dried at 80° C. for 20 seconds. An application amount after final (after biaxial stretching) drying was adjusted to 0.06 g/m². The film was uniformly heated to 105° C. using a heating roll, heated to 95° C. with a non-contact heater, and subjected to roll stretching (longitudinal stretching) at a ratio of 4.0 times. The film was subjected to heat fixation at 230° C. for 5 seconds with its width fixed to provide a polyethylene terephthalate film having a thickness of 50 μm.

Comparative Example 1

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except that lateral uniaxial stretching was performed by performing stretching only in the width direction without performing the stretching in the longitudinal direction.

Comparative Example 2

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 7 except that lateral uniaxial stretching was performed by performing stretching only in the width direction without performing the stretching in the longitudinal direction.

Comparative Examples 3 to 7

Polyester films were obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the heat fixation temperature was changed to 220° C., and PET pellets and thicknesses shown in Table 1 were adopted.

In Comparative Examples 3 to 7, as described above, the heat fixation temperature is lower than in Example 1, and the stretching ratios in the longitudinal direction and the width direction are a combination of respective condition levels that cannot be said to be the best within preferred condition ranges. Consequently, as shown in Table 1, the refractive index in the thickness direction increased, the indentation depth after test force unloading increased, and the pencil hardness after the lamination of a hard coating layer reduced as compared to Examples.

Comparative Example 8

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the stretching ratio in the longitudinal direction was changed to 2.7 times, and the heat fixation temperature was changed to 220° C.

Comparative Example 9

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the stretching ratio in the longitudinal direction was changed to 3.4 times.

Comparative Example 10

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 4 except that the heat fixation temperature was changed to 100° C.

Comparative Example 11

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 13 except that the stretching temperature in the longitudinal direction was changed to 130° C.

Comparative Example 12

A polyester film was obtained in the same manner as in Example 1 except that the preheating temperature in the width direction was changed to 120° C.

The hard coating application liquid “a” was applied with a Meyer bar to one side of each of the produced films described above so as to have a film thickness of 5 μm after drying, and was dried at 80° C. for 1 minute, followed by irradiation with UV light (cumulative light quantity: 200 mJ/cm²) to provide a hard coating film. After that, the metal nanowire-containing application liquid was applied with a Meyer bar to the surface of the produced hard coating layer so as to have a film thickness of 5 μm after drying, and was dried at 80° C. for 10 minutes. Thus, a transparent conductive polyester film was obtained. Evaluation results are shown in Table 1.

Example 21

A polyethylene terephthalate film having a thickness of 50 μm was obtained in the same manner as in Example 1. After that, a hard coating film was obtained in the same manner except that the hard coating application liquid “a” was changed to the hard coating application liquid “b”.

A touchscreen module using the transparent conductive polyester film was incorporated into an organic EL display to produce a foldable display of a smartphone type capable of being folded in half at the center of the whole with a radius of 3 mm corresponding to the bend radius in FIG. 1. The foldable displays using the transparent conductive polyester films of Examples were satisfactory in terms of operation and visibility as a smartphone capable of being carried by being folded in half at the center. In addition, their surfaces were not dented by an external force. Meanwhile, the foldable displays using the transparent conductive polyester films of Comparative Examples were not particularly preferred because the displays appeared to begin having image distortion in the folding portion as the displays were used frequently. In addition, some of the displays had a dent on their surfaces.

TABLE 1 PET film Stretching Preheating PET pellets temperature temperature Limiting Limiting Stretching ratio in longitudinal in width viscosity viscosity Longitudinal Width direction direction Kind (dl/g) (dl/g) direction direction (° C.) (° C.) Example 1 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.4 4.0 85 105 Example 2 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.7 4.0 85 105 Example 3 (a) 0.62 0.58 2.0 4.0 85 105 Example 4 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.4 4.4 85 105 Example 5 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.7 4.4 85 105 Example 6 (a) 0.62 0.58 2.0 4.4 85 105 Example 7 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.4 5.5 85 105 Example 8 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.7 5.5 85 105 Example 9 (a) 0.62 0.58 2.0 5.5 85 105 Example 10 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.7 4.4 85 105 Example 11 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.7 4.4 85 105 Example 12 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.4 4.0 75 105 Example 13 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.2 5.0 75 105 Example 14 (a) 0.62 0.58 2.0 (two 4.0 85 105 stages) Example 15 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.7 4.4 85 95 Example 16 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.7 6.0 (two 85 105 stages) Example 17 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.7 4.0 85 105 Example 18 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.7 4.0 85 105 Example 19 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.4 4.0 85 105 Example 20 (a) 0.62 0.58 4.0 1.4 105 85 Example 21 (a) 0.62 0.58 1.4 4.0 85 105 Comparative (a) 0.62 0.58 1.0 4.0 — 105 Example 1 Comparative (a) 0.62 0.58 1.0 5.5 — 105 Example 2 Comparative (a) 0.62 0.58 1.4 4.0 85 105 Example 3 Comparative (a) 0.62 0.58 1.4 4.0 85 105 Example 4 Comparative (a) 0.62 0.58 1.4 4.0 85 105 Example 5 Comparative (b) 0.58 0.54 1.4 4.0 85 105 Example 6 Comparative (c) 0.75 0.69 1.4 4.0 85 105 Example 7 Comparative (a) 0.62 0.58 2.7 4.0 85 105 Example 8 Comparative (a) 0.62 0.58 3.4 4.0 85 105 Example 9 Comparative (a) 0.62 0.58 1.4 4.4 85 105 Example 10 Comparative (a) 0.62 0.58 1.2 5.0 130 105 Example 11 Comparative (a) 0.62 0.58 1.4 4.0 85 120 Example 12 PET film Heat fixation PET film temperature Relaxation Relaxation Thickness Density (° C.) direction ratio (%) (μm) (g/cm³) Example 1 230 Width direction 4 50 1.385 Example 2 230 Width direction 4 50 1.385 Example 3 230 Width direction 4 50 1.387 Example 4 220 Width direction 4 50 1.383 Example 5 220 Width direction 4 50 1.383 Example 6 220 Width direction 4 50 1.384 Example 7 190 Width direction 4 50 1.383 Example 8 190 Width direction 4 50 1.383 Example 9 190 Width direction 4 50 1.383 Example 10 220 Longitudinal 10  50 1.385 direction Example 11 220 Longitudinal/ 3/— 50 1.385 width direction Example 12 220 Width direction 4 50 1.385 Example 13 220 Width direction 4 50 1.386 Example 14 230 Width direction 4 50 1.388 Example 15 190 Width direction 4 50 1.383 Example 16 190 Width direction 4 50 1.384 Example 17 230 Width direction 4 25 1.387 Example 18 230 Width direction 4 75 1.386 Example 19 230 — 0 50 1.384 Example 20 230 — 0 50 1.385 Example 21 230 Width direction 4 50 1.385 Comparative 220 Width direction 4 50 1.380 Example 1 Comparative 190 Width direction 4 50 1.383 Example 2 Comparative 220 Width direction 4 50 1.381 Example 3 Comparative 220 Width direction 4 25 1.381 Example 4 Comparative 220 Width direction 4 75 1.381 Example 5 Comparative 220 Width direction 4 50 1.382 Example 6 Comparative 220 Width direction 4 50 1.380 Example 7 Comparative 220 Width direction 4 50 1.398 Example 8 Comparative 230 Width direction 4 50 1.396 Example 9 Comparative 100 Width direction 4 50 1.364 Example 10 Comparative 220 Width direction 4 50 1.385 Example 11 Comparative 230 Width direction 4 50 1.384 Example 12

TABLE 2 PET Film Continuous Continuous bending bending Indentation Refractive index test at test at depth after Thickness Density Longitudinal Width Thickness Bending bend radius bend radius unloading (μm) (g/cm³) direction direction direction direction of 1.5 mm of 0.5 mm (μm) Example 1 50 1.385 1.596 1.684 1.516 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.48 direction Example 2 50 1.385 1.602 1.681 1.512 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.47 direction Example 3 50 1.387 1.609 1.679 1.509 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.42 direction Example 4 50 1.383 1.592 1.69 1.517 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.48 direction Example 5 50 1.383 1.597 1.688 1.515 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.45 direction Example 6 50 1.384 1.598 1.686 1.513 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.4 direction Example 7 50 1.383 1.591 1.694 1.513 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.35 direction Example 8 50 1.383 1.596 1.690 1.512 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.38 direction Example 9 50 1.383 1.597 1.688 1.513 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.41 direction Example 10 50 1.385 1.594 1.689 1.515 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.45 direction Example 11 50 1.385 1.595 1.687 1.515 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.45 direction Example 12 50 1.385 1.606 1.684 1.518 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.48 direction Example 13 50 1.386 1.591 1.685 1.519 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.48 direction Example 14 50 1.388 1.606 1.681 1.511 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.43 direction Example 15 50 1.383 1.598 1.691 1.495 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.27 direction Example 16 50 1.384 1.594 1.695 1.508 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.26 direction Example 17 25 1.387 1.602 1.681 1.512 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.47 direction Example 18 75 1.386 1.602 1.681 1.512 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.47 direction Example 19 50 1.384 1.598 1.687 1.513 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.48 direction Example 20 50 1.385 1.686 1.593 1.516 Width ∘ ∘ 1.48 direction Example 21 50 1.385 1.596 1.684 1.516 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.48 direction Comparative 50 1.380 1.588 1.694 1.522 Longitudinal ∘ x 1.64 Example 1 direction Comparative 50 1.383 1.584 1.701 1.512 Longitudinal ∘ x 1.56 Example 2 direction Comparative 50 1.381 1.601 1.684 1.524 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.60 Example 3 direction Comparative 25 1.381 1.591 1.676 1.530 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.62 Example 4 direction Comparative 75 1.381 1.623 1.690 1.526 Longitudinal x ∘ 1.63 Example 5 direction Comparative 50 1.382 1.598 1.682 1.524 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.66 Example 6 direction Comparative 50 1.380 1.603 1.686 1.522 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.56 Example 7 direction Comparative 50 1.398 1.631 1.686 1.500 Longitudinal x ∘ 1.46 Example 8 direction Comparative 50 1.396 1.650 1.669 1.496 Longitudinal x ∘ 1.36 Example 9 direction Comparative 50 1.364 1.578 1.660 1.532 Longitudinal x ∘ 1.56 Example 10 direction Comparative 50 1.385 1.589 1.685 1.525 Longitudinal ∘ x 1.55 Example 11 direction Comparative 50 1.384 1.596 1.679 1.526 Longitudinal ∘ ∘ 1.55 Example 12 direction Transparent PET Film conductive film Maximum Hard coating film Continuous bending test heat Hard at bend radius of 3 mm Total light shrinkage coating Conductive Conductive transmittance Haze ratio application Pencil layer on layer on (%) (%) (%) liquid hardness inside outside Example 1 91 0.8 1.4 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 2 91 0.8 1.5 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 3 91 0.8 1.6 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 4 91 0.8 1.7 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 5 91 0.8 1.9 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 6 91 0.8 2.2 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 7 91 0.8 4.4 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 8 91 0.8 4.9 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 9 91 0.8 5.1 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 10 91 0.8 1.0 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 11 91 0.8 0.8 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 12 91 0.8 1.5 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 13 91 0.8 1.5 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 14 91 0.8 1.6 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 15 91 0.8 5.0 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 16 91 0.8 4.7 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 17 91 0.8 1.4 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 18 91 0.8 1.5 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 19 91 0.8 2.0 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 20 91 0.8 1.5 a 3H ∘ ∘ Example 21 91 0.8 1.4 b 3H ∘ ∘ Comparative 91 0.8 1.4 a 1H x x Example 1 Comparative 91 0.8 3.7 a 2H x x Example 2 Comparative 91 0.8 1.8 a 2H ∘ ∘ Example 3 Comparative 91 0.8 1.8 a 2H ∘ ∘ Example 4 Comparative 91 0.8 1.8 a 2H x x Example 5 Comparative 91 0.8 1.8 a 2H ∘ ∘ Example 6 Comparative 91 0.8 1.8 a 2H ∘ ∘ Example 7 Comparative 91 0.8 1.5 a 3H x x Example 8 Comparative 91 0.8 1.0 a 3H x x Example 9 Comparative 91 0.8 6.3 a 2H x ∘ Example 10 Comparative 91 0.8 1.5 a 2H x ∘ Example 11 Comparative 91 0.8 1.4 a 2H ∘ ∘ Example 12

INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY

While maintaining mass productivity, the foldable display using the transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display of the present invention does not cause image distortion in the folding portion of the display. In particular, a mobile device or an image display apparatus including the foldable display using the transparent conductive polyester film of the present invention for a touchscreen module provides an beautiful image, is rich in functionality, and is excellent in convenience, such as portability.

EXPLANATION OF REFERENCE NUMERALS

1: foldable display 11: bend radius 2: transparent conductive polyester film for foldable display 21: folding portion 22: bending direction (direction orthogonal to folding portion) 

1. A transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display, comprising: a polyester film; and a transparent conductive layer laminated on at least one surface of the polyester film, wherein the polyester film satisfies the following conditions: (1) a refractive index in a bending direction is from 1.590 to 1.620; (2) a refractive index in a folding portion direction is from 1.670 to 1.700; (3) a refractive index in a thickness direction is 1.520 or less; and (4) a density is 1.380 g/cm³ or more, wherein the bending direction refers to a direction orthogonal to a folding portion of the polyester film at a time when the polyester film is folded.
 2. The transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display according to claim 1, wherein the transparent conductive layer contains at least one kind selected from: a conductive fibrous filler; a metal oxide; and a conductive polymer.
 3. The transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display according to claim 1, wherein the polyester film has a total light transmittance of 85% or more, a haze of 3% or less, and a maximum heat shrinkage ratio of 6% or less.
 4. The transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display according to claim 1, further comprising an easy-to-adhere layer on at least one surface of the polyester film.
 5. The transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display according to claim 1, wherein the polyester film comprises a hard coating layer having a thickness of from 1 μm to 50 μm on at least one surface thereof.
 6. A touchscreen for a foldable display, comprising the transparent conductive polyester film for a foldable display of claim
 1. 7. A foldable display comprising the touchscreen for a foldable display of claim
 6. 8. A mobile device comprising the foldable display of claim
 7. 